• Sign In
Save School Librarians
  • Take Action!
    • Take Action!
    • SIGN THE PETITION: Support School Librarians
    • SEND AN EMAIL: Support School Librarians In Your State
  • News
  • About
  • Events
  • Donate
  • Take Action!
    • Take Action!
    • SIGN THE PETITION: Support School Librarians
    • SEND AN EMAIL: Support School Librarians In Your State
  • News
  • About
  • Events
  • Sign In
Donate
  1. Home
  2. Support California School Libraries!
  3. Take Action!
  4. SEND AN EMAIL: Don't Cut School Libraries in Long Beach

SEND AN EMAIL: Don't Cut School Libraries in Long Beach

The Long Beach Unified School District has proposed drastic cuts to library services starting in the 2026-2027 school year.

In early December, Teacher Librarians and Media Assistants were informed that the district had revised the formula it uses to allocate library staff to each campus. As a result of these changes, most school libraries in the district would be open only one day per week, or roughly 20% of the school year. 18 of the 37 Teacher Librarian positions and 16 of the 20 Media Assistant positions would be eliminated. 

What will it mean for libraries on most LBUSD campuses to be closed for 80% of the year? 

Students will not have consistent access to diverse, high-quality literature, nonfiction texts to expand their background knowledge, or tools such as Chromebooks and printers. Students will not have safe, comfortable places to complete schoolwork, decompress, or meet with their peers during unscheduled classes, lunchtime, or after school. For many students, the library is their safe space and refuge; it is a place where they feel a sense of belonging. 

If access to libraries is restricted as proposed, classes will not be visiting the library on a consistent basis. Teacher Librarians are highly-qualified personnel; all LBUSD have at least 2 teaching credentials. Teacher Librarians host book fairs, organize reading incentive programs, and help students locate the books that will turn them into lifelong readers. Teacher Librarians teach effective research methods and help students to locate reputable sources, such as online databases. Library lessons also focus on citing sources, identifying misinformation and disinformation, and the safe and ethical use of AI. 

In an era of declining literacy rates and rampant disinformation, libraries and Teacher Librarians are more relevant and necessary than ever. Without their services, students will not be college or career-ready and will not be adequately prepared to be informed citizens in our democracy. 

Please join in contacting the LBUSD Leadership Team and School Board with a personal message urging them to preserve Teacher Librarian and Media Assistant positions so that the doors of our libraries remain open to our school communities. 

SEND AN EMAIL: Don't Cut School Libraries in Long Beach

The Long Beach Unified School District has proposed drastic cuts to library services starting in the 2026-2027 school year.

In early December, Teacher Librarians and Media Assistants were informed that the district had revised the formula it uses to allocate library staff to each campus. As a result of these changes, most school libraries in the district would be open only one day per week, or roughly 20% of the school year. 18 of the 37 Teacher Librarian positions and 16 of the 20 Media Assistant positions would be eliminated. 

What will it mean for libraries on most LBUSD campuses to be closed for 80% of the year? 

Students will not have consistent access to diverse, high-quality literature, nonfiction texts to expand their background knowledge, or tools such as Chromebooks and printers. Students will not have safe, comfortable places to complete schoolwork, decompress, or meet with their peers during unscheduled classes, lunchtime, or after school. For many students, the library is their safe space and refuge; it is a place where they feel a sense of belonging. 

If access to libraries is restricted as proposed, classes will not be visiting the library on a consistent basis. Teacher Librarians are highly-qualified personnel; all LBUSD have at least 2 teaching credentials. Teacher Librarians host book fairs, organize reading incentive programs, and help students locate the books that will turn them into lifelong readers. Teacher Librarians teach effective research methods and help students to locate reputable sources, such as online databases. Library lessons also focus on citing sources, identifying misinformation and disinformation, and the safe and ethical use of AI. 

In an era of declining literacy rates and rampant disinformation, libraries and Teacher Librarians are more relevant and necessary than ever. Without their services, students will not be college or career-ready and will not be adequately prepared to be informed citizens in our democracy. 

Please join in contacting the LBUSD Leadership Team and School Board with a personal message urging them to preserve Teacher Librarian and Media Assistant positions so that the doors of our libraries remain open to our school communities. 

Spread the Word!
Sign in if you'd like new recruits to be credited to you.
Share
Tweet
Email
  • Sign In

Save School Librarians is a project from EveryLibrary made possible with support from Follett

Contact

Privacy and Terms of Service

Careers

You can read more about our work in our Annual Report 

As a 501(c)4 organization (FEIN 46-1534149), contributions to EveryLibrary are not tax-deductible. However, if you'd like to make a larger tax-deductible donation to the EveryLibrary Institute (our 501c3) to support our research and training for librarians, please visit everylibraryinstitute.org

PO Box 406, 45 E. Burlington St., Riverside, IL 60546, United States

EveryLibrary © 2019. All Rights Reserved.

Powered by NationBuilder + Nation Digital

  • Share